Creating a Healing Environment:

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: Creating a Healing Environment: From Designing Space to Delivering Care Description As organizations strive to improve the patient care experience and health outcomes while reducing costs, an understanding of how hospital and home environments contribute to overall health, has never been more timely. This symposium provides an excellent opportunity to explore how healthcare environments contribute to improved healing. Through presentations of current research, evidence based practice and quality improvement projects, you will learn how transforming the healthcare environment can impact the patient s journey to healing and the caregiver s path to optimal outcomes. Program Objectives At the conclusion of the Symposium, the participant will be able to: Describe how research findings lead to design decisions in hospital space planning. Give two examples of study findings that demonstrate how environmental changes relate to improvements in the patient experience of healing. Discuss one intervention that could be implemented to positively impact the healing environment in the participant s clinical setting. Target Audience All health care professionals and space and planning design experts interested in learning about the impact of environments on patients across the continuum of care should attend, including nurses, allied health providers, administrators and health care design and planning experts.

Keynote Speakers Rafael Viñoly Born in Uruguay, Rafael Viñoly has lived in New York since 1978 from where he oversees an international practice that has developed more than 400 designs for projects in the United States, Latin America, Europe, Middle East, and Asia. Viñoly s work is marked by a sustained structural originality that transcends the passing fads of architectural movements, and he is consistently driven by the belief that the essential responsibility of architecture is to generate the most elegant solution within the economy of each project. Among his most notable and critically acclaimed buildings are the Tokyo International Forum; the Kimmel Center for the Performing Arts in Philadelphia and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute Janelia Farm Campus in Ashburn, Virginia. He is a member of the American Institute of Architects, the National Academy, the Royal Institute of British Architects, the Japan Institute of Architects, and the Sociedad Central de Arquitectos in Argentina. Robin Guenther Robin Guenther, FAIA LEED Fellow is Principal of Perkins+Will and Senior Advisor to the non-profit Health Care Without Harm. Robin works at the intersection of health care architecture, health and sustainable policy and participates in a wide range of leading edge advocacy initiatives while continuing to practice. Healthcare Design magazine named her the #1 Most Influential Designer in Healthcare in 2010 and 2011. She was a TEDMED 2014 speaker. She is a 2016 Robert Wood Johnson Culture of Health Leader. She co-authored the 2013 book Sustainable Healthcare Architecture and the 2014 US Dept of Health and Human Services Sustainable and Resilient Healthcare Infrastructure Toolkit. She leads the Packard 2.0 expansion project for Perkins+Will. Page 2/6

Keynote Speakers (continued) George Tingwald, MD Director of Medical Planning, In an unusual combination of skills and expertise, Dr. Tingwald applies his qualifications as an architect and doctor of medicine to create practical and efficient designs for health care facilities. Having received special training in surgery and ancillary services, emergency services, and women s and children s health, he is committed to designing facilities that merge excellent medical functionality with the primary needs of patients and families. Because of his comprehensive skill set, Dr. Tingwald is especially adept in authoring campus and hospital master plans. Guest Speaker Teri Oelrich, BSN, MBA Partner, NBBJ Teri Oelrich has three decades of experience in the healthcare industry, including full-time nursing, healthcare planning and healthcare consulting. Her clients include some of the world s top-tier health institutions: Kaiser Permanente, University of Washington Medical Center, Children s Hospital of Chicago, Sharp Memorial System, Wellington Hospital, Children s Hospital of Orange County and the Oregon Health & Science University. She is a frequent speaker on the topics of health and wellness and is active in promoting her industry. In addition, Teri has volunteered at the Nursing Institute for Healthcare Design, the Oregon Health & Sciences University, the AIA Academy of Architecture for Health, Friends of Doernbecher Children s Hospital Guild and the Coalition of Health Environments Research Council, among others. Page 3/6

Program Agenda Friday 8:00 a.m. 4:30 p.m. 8:00 a.m. Registration and Continental Breakfast 8:30 a.m. Opening remarks and recognition 8:45 a.m. Intersection of Science Technology and Humanity the New Stanford Hospital Rafael Vinoly, MA, Fellow, AIA, Lead Architect, expansion 9:25 a.m. The Future Hospital: Designing Healing Environments for Pediatric Patients, Families and Caregivers Robin Guenther, FAIA LEED Fellow, Project Director, Lucile Packard Children s Hospital expansion. 10:05 a.m. Questions 10:20 a.m. Break Podium Session I Theme: Patient Perceptions Contributing to Developing Healing Environments 10:40 a.m. An Inter-professional Approach to Evidence-based Practice: Developing Recommendations Focused on a Safe and Consistent Transitional Environment for the Adolescent Young Adult Jessica Matei, BSN, PHN, RNC, Lucile Packard Children s Hospital 11:00 a.m. The Transitionalist Pneumonia Reduction Pilot Rita Ghatak, PhD, 11:20 a.m. Implementing an Acuity Adaptable Care Model in an Existing Academic Medical Center Cyndi Parke, MSN, RN, and Erin McCalley, MS, RN, CNS, CCNS, CCRN, 11:45 a.m. Lunch and Poster Session 12:20 p.m. Clinical Implications for Space and Health Care Planning for Practice Environments The Medical Perspective George Tingwald, MD, AIA, Director of Medical Planning, 12:50 p.m. Clinical Implications for Space and Health Care Planning for Practice Environments The Nursing Perspective Teri Oelrich, MBA, RN, Partner, NBBJ 1:20 p.m. Questions Podium Session II Theme: Modifying Clinical Settings and Workflows to Foster Healing Environments 1:35 p.m. A Remedy for Families: March of Dimes NICU Family Support Hoda Sapir, LCSW and Mary Ann Crall, CCLS Children s Hospital, Los Angeles 1:55 p.m. Establishing a Patient-Centered Environment for the Adolescent during Medication Administration Emily Hardy, BSN, RN-C, Lucile Packard Children s Hospital, Thejas Kamath, University of California San Diego School of Medicine 2:15 p.m. Parent and Child Perception of Pediatric Postoperative Pain Jennifer Hayakawa, DNP, PCNS-BC, CNRN, CCRN and Juleah Walsh, MSN, PCNS-BC, CPAN, Children s Hospital of Orange County 2:35 p.m. Break Podium Session III Theme: Improving Health and Healthy Environments through Self-Care and Education 2:55 p.m. Testing the Effects of an Innovative Group Visit Prenatal Care Model on Depression and Anxiety among Low Income Ethnic Minority Women Susan Vonderheid, PhD, RN, University of Illinois at Chicago, School of Nursing 3:15 p.m. Third Time s the C.H.A.R.M.S: An Educational Smoke cessation Project Using Thirdhand Smoke Janine Quinlan, DNP, PMHNP-BC, Wilkes University and Catholic Family Center 3:35 p.m. Prevalence of Compassion Fatigue in Pediatric Nurses Kelly Johnson, PhD, RN, Lucile Packard Children s Hospital 3:55 p.m. Poster Awards and Closing Remarks 4:15 p.m. Adjourn This program will be held at Stanford University Arrillaga Alumni Center 326 Galvez Street Stanford, CA 94305 For directions & parking information: http://alumni.stanford.edu/get/page/resources/ alumnicenter/directions We reserve the right to make program changes. Page 4/6

Planning Committee Planning Committee Kathleen Bradley, DNP, RN, NEA-BC Executive Director Center for Professional Excellence and Inquiry Garrett Chan, PhD, APRN, FAEN, FPCN, FNAP, FAAN Interim Director, Center of Education and Professional Development Clinical Associate Professor Stanford School of Medicine Sonya Feng, MSN, RN Nursing Professional Development Specialist Center for Education and Professional Development Anita Girard, DNP, RN, CNL, CPHQ, NEA-BC Interim Director of Nursing Excellence Magnet Program Director Karynn Halstead, RN, BSN Chair, Nursing Research and Evidence Based Practice Council Cathy Hedges, MS, RN, BC Nursing Professional Development Specialist Center for Professional Excellence and Inquiry Jenna Lindley Administrative Assistant/ Project Coordinator Office of Research, Patient Care Services Annette Nasr, PhD, RN Nurse Scientist Assistant Clinical Professor Stanford School of Medicine David Pickham, PhD, RN, FAHA Director, Research, Patient Care Services Assistant Clinical Professor Stanford School of Medicine Diane Zhen, BSN, RN Member, Research and Innovation Council Provider approved by the California Board of Registered Nursing. Provider Number CEP12165 for 6 CE hours. Center for Education and Professional Development is accredited as a provider of continuing nursing education by the American Nurses Credentialing Center s Commission on Accreditation. Maximum of 6 contact hours Neither SHC nor ANCC endorse any commercial products Page 5/6

Registration Registration Preregistration is required. Breakfast, lunch and parking provided. Early Bird Registration: 3/20/2017 5/15/2017 Fee: $190 Regular Registration: 5/16/2017 6/2/2017 Fee: $240 Register Online https://stanford.eventready.com/events/2017researchsymposium All participants must register online. Questions? For questions regarding the registration process, please email nursingsymposium@stanfordchildrens.org Emails are frequently checked throughout the business day. A confirmation letter and map will be emailed to you upon receipt of your payment. Prior to class, registered participants will receive an email with viewing instructions for the online syllabus. Cancellation Policy If the symposium is canceled by the event organizers, the enrollee will be notified 2 weeks prior to the symposium and a full refund will be given. Cancellation by the enrollee If you self-cancel your registration 2 weeks or more prior to the symposium Full Refund If you self-cancel your registration less than 2 weeks prior to the symposium Partial refund, less a $35 processing fee and cost of online symposium material If you self-cancel your registration less than 48 hours prior to the symposium No Refund No show No refund No exceptions Registrations must be cancelled online by the enrollee (event organizers are not able to cancel registrations) Page 6/6